Abstracts
Abstract
It has been argued that London’s Tecumseh Park (renamed John Labatt Memorial Park in 1937) is the oldest, still functioning ball grounds in baseball’s lengthy history. This has been challenged persistently by scholars such as A.J. Bastarache on behalf of Clinton, Massachusetts, who argue that disastrous floods in London’s history “removed” the storied Tecumseh diamond from its original location to a completely new site, thus negating its record of continuous operation in one specific place. This paper examines newspaper and magazine articles related to the flood and the park to show that Tecumseh Park in 1883 and John Labatt Memorial Park in 1937 were renovated in timely fashion following floods and that the park did not change its physical location. Such findings provide further evidence undergirding the park’s bona fide heritage distinction as the oldest still operating ball ground in history.
Résumé
On soutient que Tecumseh Park à London (rebaptisé John Labatt Memorial Park en 1937) est le plus vieux terrain de baseball opérationnel de la longue histoire de ce sport. Ceci est contesté par des chercheurs tel que A.J. Bastarache – au nom de la ville de Clinton, Massachusetts - qui affirme que les inondations désastreuses de l’histoire de London ont déplacé le losange de Tecumseh originel vers un site entièrement nouveau, annulant ainsi son record d’opération continue dans un endroit spécifique. Nous allons examiner des articles de journaux et de revues liés aux inondations et au parc pour démontrer que Tecumseh Park en 1883 et John Labatt Memorial Park en 1937 ont été rapidement rénovés et que la localisation physique du parc n’a pas changé. De telles découvertes fournissent une preuve supplémentaire qui sous-tend la distinction patrimoniale du parc en tant que le plus ancien terrain de baseball opérationnel.
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Appendices
Biographical notes
Robert Barney, educated at the University of New Mexico (PhD, 1968), has lived and worked in Canada at Western University for the past fifty years, where he received the Doctor of Laws, honoris causa, in 2014. His scholarship, over some 300+ publications, focusses largely on historical and commercial aspects of the Modern Olympic Movement.
Riley Nowokowski is a PhD candidate from Western University in London, Ontario in socio-cultural Kinesiology. His supervisor is Dr. Bob Barney. Riley primarily researches local sport history. He volunteers with the London Majors Alumni Association and has presented at the Canadian Baseball History Conference.